CA2692817A1 - Method of compressing a cryptographic value - Google Patents

Method of compressing a cryptographic value Download PDF

Info

Publication number
CA2692817A1
CA2692817A1 CA 2692817 CA2692817A CA2692817A1 CA 2692817 A1 CA2692817 A1 CA 2692817A1 CA 2692817 CA2692817 CA 2692817 CA 2692817 A CA2692817 A CA 2692817A CA 2692817 A1 CA2692817 A1 CA 2692817A1
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
public key
criteria
cryptographic value
key
cryptographic
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
CA 2692817
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Daniel R. Brown
Scott A. Vanstone
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Certicom Corp
Original Assignee
Certicom Corp.
Daniel R. Brown
Scott A. Vanstone
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Certicom Corp., Daniel R. Brown, Scott A. Vanstone filed Critical Certicom Corp.
Publication of CA2692817A1 publication Critical patent/CA2692817A1/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L9/00Cryptographic mechanisms or cryptographic arrangements for secret or secure communications; Network security protocols
    • H04L9/30Public key, i.e. encryption algorithm being computationally infeasible to invert or user's encryption keys not requiring secrecy
    • H04L9/3066Public key, i.e. encryption algorithm being computationally infeasible to invert or user's encryption keys not requiring secrecy involving algebraic varieties, e.g. elliptic or hyper-elliptic curves
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L9/00Cryptographic mechanisms or cryptographic arrangements for secret or secure communications; Network security protocols
    • H04L9/32Cryptographic mechanisms or cryptographic arrangements for secret or secure communications; Network security protocols including means for verifying the identity or authority of a user of the system or for message authentication, e.g. authorization, entity authentication, data integrity or data verification, non-repudiation, key authentication or verification of credentials
    • H04L9/3247Cryptographic mechanisms or cryptographic arrangements for secret or secure communications; Network security protocols including means for verifying the identity or authority of a user of the system or for message authentication, e.g. authorization, entity authentication, data integrity or data verification, non-repudiation, key authentication or verification of credentials involving digital signatures
    • H04L9/3252Cryptographic mechanisms or cryptographic arrangements for secret or secure communications; Network security protocols including means for verifying the identity or authority of a user of the system or for message authentication, e.g. authorization, entity authentication, data integrity or data verification, non-repudiation, key authentication or verification of credentials involving digital signatures using DSA or related signature schemes, e.g. elliptic based signatures, ElGamal or Schnorr schemes
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L9/00Cryptographic mechanisms or cryptographic arrangements for secret or secure communications; Network security protocols
    • H04L9/32Cryptographic mechanisms or cryptographic arrangements for secret or secure communications; Network security protocols including means for verifying the identity or authority of a user of the system or for message authentication, e.g. authorization, entity authentication, data integrity or data verification, non-repudiation, key authentication or verification of credentials
    • H04L9/3263Cryptographic mechanisms or cryptographic arrangements for secret or secure communications; Network security protocols including means for verifying the identity or authority of a user of the system or for message authentication, e.g. authorization, entity authentication, data integrity or data verification, non-repudiation, key authentication or verification of credentials involving certificates, e.g. public key certificate [PKC] or attribute certificate [AC]; Public key infrastructure [PKI] arrangements
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L2209/00Additional information or applications relating to cryptographic mechanisms or cryptographic arrangements for secret or secure communication H04L9/00
    • H04L2209/30Compression, e.g. Merkle-Damgard construction
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L2209/00Additional information or applications relating to cryptographic mechanisms or cryptographic arrangements for secret or secure communication H04L9/00
    • H04L2209/60Digital content management, e.g. content distribution
    • H04L2209/605Copy protection

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Computer Security & Cryptography (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
  • Theoretical Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mathematical Physics (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Pure & Applied Mathematics (AREA)
  • Mathematical Optimization (AREA)
  • Computing Systems (AREA)
  • Mathematical Analysis (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Algebra (AREA)
  • Storage Device Security (AREA)

Abstract

A method of compressing a cryptographic value. The method comprising the steps of: (a) selecting a secret value; (b) performing a cryptographic operation on the secret value to generate the cryptographic value; (c) determining whether the cryptographic value satisfies the pre-determined criteria; and (d) repeating the sequence of steps starting at step (a) until the cryptographic value satisfies the pre-determined criteria.

Description

Method of Compressing a Cryptographic Value Field of Invention [0001] The invention relates generally to the field of encryption. In particular, the invention relates to a method of compressing a cryptographic value.

Back2round of Invention [0002] Public key cryptography utilizes a public key and a private key that are mathematically related. The relationship is such that the public key can readily be computed from the private key but computation of the private key from the public key is considered infeasible. The private key is thus maintained secret. The keys are used in a variety of well known protocols to secure or sign messages.
[0003] As a cryptographic value, a public key or its representation generally is not easily manageable by a user. Generally speaking, cryptographic algorithms involve values that are random or indistinguishable from random characters within a certain space. People generally have difficulty with managing a long string of characters that resembles a random collection of letters and digits. To provide adequate security, the size of such a space is often chosen so that exhaustive search by computers of current technology becomes infeasible. A space of 280 is considered out of reach today. Representing a cryptographic value in such a space generally takes at least 80 bits, or 10 bytes. A value of ten bytes corresponds to twenty hexadecimal digits. Some cryptographic values, such as elliptic curve public keys and hash values, must generally be twice as long as this to have an equal security level. The minimal security level would involve a representation of hexadecimal digits. As computation power or computation techniques advances, longer representations will become desirable or necessary. Other cryptographic values, such as DSA and RSA keys, have even longer representations, with 256 hexadecimal digits in order to maintain the same security level.
[0004] Random values of such sizes, even just 20 hexadecimal digits, are quite difficult for users to manage without error. In particular, users may have difficulty 1. recalling such random values without assistance, 2. recognizing such random values even if seen before, 3. communicating such values by voice to other users, or 4. transcribing such values via print or display.
[0005] Because of these difficulties, user interfaces to cryptographic protocols seldom give users access to the cryptographic values. This may be because it is generally believed that such access would be useless. Occasionally, cryptographic values are made optionally accessible to users. The commonest cryptographic value that users are likely to encounter is a public key. Many protocols optionally display a representation of a public key in a certificate to the user.
[0006] For example, when an SSL or TLS client in a web browser receives a server certificate which is not signed by a trusted certification authority ("CA"), the SSL or TSL
client commonly displays a warning to the user. The warning message typically notifies the user that the certificate cannot be trusted, displays the name of the purported owner and issuer of the certificate. Often an option is given to the user to either not trust the certificate, trust the certificate once, or to always trust it. Some clients also display the public key in hexadecimal or Base64 form to the user. Users generally cannot make use of the displayed public key, because they have nothing to corroborate against. Even if the user did have some authentic source to verify the public key against, a hexadecimal or Base64 representation would make the verification a nuisance.
[0007] These warning messages present a danger to users. Suppose a user tries to revisit a familiar secure but uncertified site, but accidentally misspells the web address. An attacker could create a web-site at the mistaken address. The attacker could create a web page that looks identical the correct web-site. The attacker can also create a server certificate for the web-site. The attacker may not be able to get the server certificate certified by a trusted CA, because the trusted CA may do due diligence against such attacks before issuing server certificates. However, the attacker can issue a certificate to itself.
[0008] When a browser client encounters such a certificate, it will recognize that the certificate is not certified by a trusted CA and accordingly warn the user.
Some users may ignore the warning message and connect to the site regardless. Other users may reject the web-site, without regard to the warning. A third class of users, perhaps the majority, may glance at the name of the certificate presented in the warning message and choose to accept the certificate once (for one session).

[00091 This third class of users would inspect the name. Because the certificate has been issued by the attacker, the attacker can choose a valid name, one for the correct site. If the browser matches the name against the URL, then the attacker can use the matched URL.
The false URL is very close to the true URL, however, so the user may not notice the difference. (Some browsers might not re-display a correctly matched URL in the warning message, since it is already displayed in the address line of the browser.) [0010] Therefore it is likely that this third class of user will accept the certificate, at least for one session. This is made more likely by the fact that many legitimate web-sites cannot afford to purchase server certificates from CAs, but still want encryption, so instead just issue their own certificates. Many users have been accustomed to such sites, and are more likely to accept certificates.

[0011] The negative consequence of accepting the attacker's certificate is that the user may think he or she is communicating with the true web-site. The user may obtain false information from the false web-site. The user may also enter information into the false web-site. In particular, the user may enter a password. The attacker may obtain the password, and use it to impersonate the user at the true web-site. If the true web-site is an on-line banking site, the attacker may be able to withdraw funds from the user's bank account.

[0012] Solutions have been proposed in the context of one-time passwords that are hashes of salted conventional passwords. In one system, a stream of 64 bits is divided into six segments of 11 bits. Each segment is then rendered as a word taken from a dictionary of 2048 words. The words chosen have four or fewer letters, with the purpose to make them easier to type, so that the number of key strokes is limited. The aim is to keep the error rate lower than for hexadecimal or Base64 data, because the words chosen are valid English words.

[0013] A number of security deficiencies, however, exist in using lists of English words. Audio recordings of speech can be re-spliced to form word lists. Thus if speech is used for authentication then alternative representations may be advantageous.
At a textual level, word lists may not offer as much efficiency or may not fit well enough with existing text formats, such as electronic mail addresses.

[0014] It is an object of the present invention to mitigate or obviate at least one of the above mentioned disadvantages.

Summary of Invention [0015] In one aspect of the invention, there is provided a general method of compressing a cryptographic value that satisfies a pre-determined criteria.
The method comprising the steps of: (a) selecting a secret value; (b) performing a cryptographic operation on said secret value to generate the cryptographic value; (c) determining whether the cryptographic value satisfies the pre-determined criteria; and (d) repeating the sequence of steps starting at step (a) until the cryptographic value satisfies the pre-determined criteria.
[0016] In one embodiment, public keys or public key certificates are compressed according to this method of generating a cryptographic value. The pre-determined criteria is a compression criteria. It can be, for example, a requirement that a cryptographic value has 40 trailing zeroes. Compression of a public key or a public key certificate confines the public key or the certificate to a restricted space. To compress a public key certificate, the certificate authority who issues the certificate does an iterated computation of exhaustively computing and testing candidate values of public/private key pairs exhaustively until one that gives a compressed certificate is found. To compress a public key, its owner can do a similar exhaustive search of public/private key pairs.

[0017] In other aspects the invention provides various combinations and subsets of the aspects described above.

Brief Description of Drawin2s [0018] For the purposes of description, but not of limitation, an embodiment or embodiments of the invention will now be explained in greater detail by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:

[0019] Figure 1 shows schematically a process for compressing cryptographic values, such as public keys or implicit certificates;

[0020] Figure 2 illustrates a process of compressing a public key that has 40 trailing zeros, as a special case of the process shown in Figure 1;

[0021] Figure 3 illustrates an improved process modified from that shown in Figure 2;
and [0022] Figure 4 illustrates a process of compressing a public-key certificate.

Detailed Description of Embodiments [0023] The description which follows, and the embodiments described therein, are provided by way of illustration of an example, or examples, of particular embodiments of the principles of the present invention. These examples are provided for the purposes of explanation, and not limitation, of those principles and of the invention. In the description which follows, like parts are marked throughout the specification and the drawings with the same respective reference numerals.

[0024] Figure 1 shows schematically a process for compressing cryptographic values, such as public keys or public key certificates, so that they are manageable for users.
Compression of a cryptographic value, such as a public key or a public key certificate, is to confine it to a restricted space. Generally speaking, cryptographic algorithms involve values that are random within a certain space, or are indistinguishable from such random values. These spaces are of a size that makes exhaustive search infeasible by computers of current technology. A space of 280 is considered out of reach today.
Representing a cryptographic value in such a space generally takes at least 80 bits, or 10 bytes.
Compression is to confine the cryptographic value to a subspace of such spaces so that a cryptographic value in such a space can be expressed in a shorter representation.

[0025] The compression process 100 starts at step 110 by selecting a compression criteria for a cryptographic value. The criteria may be rule based, for example, by requiring all public keys to be selected from a pre-determined collection of words or pseudowords.
The criteria may also be pattern based, for example, by requiring the selected cryptographic value to have 40 trailing zeros. The criteria may also be to select a particular string or text for a given number of trailing characters or the entire cryptographic text, for example, to correspond to an e-mail address or a website address. The criteria may also be based on any other user selected requirements that may make a cryptographic value more manageable.
Of course, the criteria may also be pre-determined in another process or fixed by a third party, such as a request submitted to the system. The purpose of the criteria is that certain bits of the cryptographic value can be omitted during transmission and storage and then reconstructed prior to a further cryptographic operation, for example, decryption, to be performed on the cryptographic value.

[0026] At the next step 120, a private key or other secret value that is required in a cryptographic operation is selected or generated. The nature of the secret value corresponds to the cryptographic operation. For example, a user may select a private key d at this step for finding a manageable public key. Alternatively, a certification authority may select an initial secret contribution to a requester's private key if an implicit certificate is to be compressed, or, when an encrypted text is required, the secret is an encryption key used to encrypt the text.

[0027] Next at step 130, a cryptographic value is computed, incorporating the secret value as at least one of the inputs. For example, one may compute a public key P from a private key d using elliptic curve cryptography ("ECC"). The public key P may be computed from P=d*G
where G is a generator of a selected elliptic curve. Of course, at this step, depending on the needs, the cryptographic value to be computed is not limited to a public key.
It may be, for example, a public certificate as indicated above.

[0028] Next, at step 140, the computed cryptographic value is evaluated to determine if it meets the pre-selected criteria. For example, one may verify at this step whether the public key has 40 trailing zeros, or if the cryptographic value matches the pre-selected text, such as an e-mail address. If the criteria is met, both the secret and the cryptographic values are output to the user at step 150 and the process terminates. For example, the private/public key pair may be provided to the user. As the trailing bits can be removed and later reconstructed, the compressed cryptographic value requires less bits to represent. This tends to make it more manageable for a human recipient as it is generally difficult for human users to manage a long string of apparent random bits.

[0029] If the criteria is not met, the process is iterated by selecting a new secret value and computing a corresponding cryptographic value until the criteria is met.
In certain applications, such as searching for a compressed elliptic curve public key, the cryptographic value is a constant multiple of the secret value. The secret value may be simply incremented at step 160 to arrive at a new value and the cryptographic value may be correspondingly incremented at step 170, in order to avoid the need of a more expensive multiplication operation. The process then returns to step 140 until a secret value is found so that the corresponding cryptographic value is in a compressed form, namely satisfying the compression criteria selected at the beginning of the process.

[0030] As an example, Figure 2 shows a process 200 of finding a public key that has 40 trailing zeros. This is accomplished by a trial and error process. For example, suppose one wants a compressed elliptic curve public key Q whose last 40 bits (five bytes) are zero. In this example, G is the generator of a selected elliptic curve of order n. The following process can be followed to find such a public key:

1. Generate a random private key d E[ 1, n- 1](step 210) 2. Compute the corresponding public key Q = d G (step 220) 3. If the public key Q, ends in 40 bits of value zero (step 230) then stop and output the public and private key pair (d, Q) (step 240) 4. Otherwise, go back to the start of the process, step 210 This process takes on average 240 iterations. The process, as described, thus takes approximately 240 elliptic curve scalar multiplications.

[0031] The process 200 described above can be improved to yield possibly an approximate hundredfold improvement. The modified process 300 shown in Figure 3 also starts from initializing a private/public key pair but it takes advantage of the multiplicative relationship between the private and public keys to avoid the multiplication operations otherwise required during the exhaustive search. The modified process 300 has the following steps:

1. Initialize a private/public key pair (d , Qo), namely, first generate a random private key d E [1,n - 1] and set index i to 0 (step 310), and then compute the corresponding public key Qo = d G (step 320);

2. In a loop, first evaluate whether the public key Q; meets the compression criteria (step 330), i.e., if it ends in 40 bits of zero;

3. If Q; is not in a compressed form, then (a) Increment the private key: dl+I =di +1 (step 340) (b) Increment the public key: Q;+I =Qi + G (step 350) (c) Increment i by one (d) Return to the beginning of the loop (i.e., step 330) 4. Output the private/public key pair (d, Q) when a compressed key Q is found (step 360) [0032] This process also takes about 240 iterations. Each iteration, however, costs mainly just one elliptic curve point addition. The saving of computation costs depends on the size of n. In view of today's technology and the corresponding security level required of an encryption system, the saving can be approximately a hundred times faster than the process 200 based on elliptic curve multiplication, but would be greater if a longer key is required for better security, for example. The number of iterations 240 mentioned here is used in this example because it is considered to be just within reach of today's desktop computers (running for several days). With a different number of iterations, a different savings will be realized.

[0033] If public keys in a given system are generated in this manner, then they can be compressed by omission of the last 40 bits. For example, today 22 byte elliptic curve keys are commonly used. With 40 trailing zero bits, public keys compress to 17 bytes. Different criteria on the public key can be used. For example, 32 trailing zero bits can be sought, or some other fixed pattern may be used. If a different criteria is used, the process described above will be adjusted so that at each iteration, it is the selected criteria that is tested.

[0034] Compression comes at a one-time computational cost during key generation.
This cost can be amortized over the life of a public key. Key generation and certification is a generally one-time operation. The extra cost of searching for a suitable key may be well worth the savings achieved by reduced storage and transmission costs.

[0035] The methods described above in connection with Figures 1 to 3 can be applied to generation of digital signatures in certificates by certification authorities.
By doing this, certificates can be compressed. Certificates often need to be stored or transmitted.
Compressing certificates help reducing the associated storage and transmission costs. Also, in theory certificate chains can be very long, in which case, compression generally tends to be beneficial.
[00361 In a public key system, a public-key certificate is a data structure that consists of at least two parts, a data part and a signature part. The data part contains cleartext data that includes at least the public key to be certified and a piece of information indicating the identity of the public key's owner. The signature part consists of a digital signature over the data part. The digital signature is that of the certification authority, thereby binding the key owner's identity to the key certified.

[0037] The certification authority ("CA") already has its public key and private key selected and, in general, already has its public key publicized. The certificate of a public key of a subject entity therefore can be compressed if a suitable public key of the subject entity is appropriately selected, such as in accordance with the general procedure outlined in Figure 1. Figure 4 illustrates schematically how a public-key certificate can be compressed in an example embodiment. In this example, the compression criteria is to find a certificate that has 40 trailing zeros.

[0038] The CA initializes the process 400 by initializing the data part.
During initialization 410, the CA selects an initial private key do of the subject and computes the corresponding initial public key Qo. The CA also selects the identity information I to be included in the certificate. At step 420, the CA signs the initial data part to obtain an initial signature S. The signature S computed is evaluated at step 430 to determine whether it has 40 trailing zeros, i.e., to determine if the signature meets the compression criteria.

[0039] In general, an arbitrary initial public key does not lead to a compressed certificate. The CA then finds a new key pair at step 440. Advantageously, the CA can increment the private key and compute the corresponding public key by adding a corresponding increment:

d1+1 =dt +1 Qt+1 = Ql +G

Next, the process returns to step 420 and a digital signature corresponding to the new public key is computed. The new signature is evaluated at step 430 to determine whether it meets the criteria. If it does, the CA terminates the process and provides the subject entity with the key pair and the compressed public key certificate at step 450. If the signature does not meet the criteria, steps 420, 430, and 440 are repeated until a compressed certificate is found. The public-key certificate so obtained is compressed in that its signature part is compressed.

[0040] Various embodiments of the invention have now been described in detail.
Those skilled in the art will appreciate that numerous modifications, adaptations and variations may be made to the embodiments without departing from the scope of the invention. Since changes in and or additions to the above-described best mode may be made without departing from the nature, spirit or scope of the invention, the invention is not to be limited to those details but only by the appended claims.

Claims (12)

1. A method of generating a cryptographic value that satisfies a pre-determined criteria, the method comprising the steps of:
(a) selecting a secret value;
(b) performing a cryptographic operation on said secret value to generate the cryptographic value;
(c) determining whether the cryptographic value satisfies the pre-determined criteria;
and (d) repeating the sequence of steps starting at step (a) until the cryptographic value satisfies the pre-determined criteria.
2. The method of claim 3, wherein the pre-determined criteria is to produce the cryptographic value containing a sequence of pre-selected characters.
3. A method of selecting a public key that satisfies a compression criteria, the public key belonging to a private/public key pair defined on an elliptic curve of order n and with a generator g, the method comprising the steps of:
(a) initializing the public key and a corresponding private key, said private key being selected randomly from [1,n);
(b) determining whether the public key satisfies the compression criteria;

(c) if the compression criteria is not satisfied, incrementing the private key by a first pre-selected increment, incrementing the public key by a second pre-selected increment and repeating the steps (b) and (c) until the pre-determined criteria is satisfied; and (d) outputting the private key and the public key.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein the first pre-selected increment equals 1.
5. The method of claim 3, wherein the second pre-selected increment equals g.
6. The method of claim 3, wherein the compression criteria is to produce the public key containing a sequence of pre-selected characters.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein the sequence of pre-selected characters is a sequence of trailing zeros.
8. A method of compressing an ECC cryptographic value that satisfies a compression criteria, said ECC cryptographic value being mathematically related to a private/public key pair defined on an elliptic curve of order n and with a generator g, comprising:
(a) initializing the public key and a corresponding private key, said private key being selected randomly from [1,n);
(b) computing said ECC cryptographic value from said public and private keys;
(c) determining whether said ECC cryptographic value satisfies the compression criteria;
(d) if the compression criteria is not satisfied, incrementing the private key by a first pre-selected increment, incrementing the public key by a second pre-selected increment and repeating the steps (b) to (d) until the compression criteria is satisfied; and (e) outputting said ECC cryptographic value and said public and private keys.
9. The method of claim 8, wherein the first pre-selected increment equals 1.
10. The method of claim 8, wherein the second pre-selected increment equals g.
11. The method of claim 8, wherein the compression criteria is to produce the ECC
cryptographic value containing a sequence of pre-selected characters.
12. The method of claim 11, wherein the sequence of pre-selected characters is a sequence of trailing zeros.
CA 2692817 2007-07-17 2008-07-09 Method of compressing a cryptographic value Abandoned CA2692817A1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US95023507P 2007-07-17 2007-07-17
US60/950,235 2007-07-17
PCT/CA2008/001254 WO2009009868A1 (en) 2007-07-17 2008-07-09 Method of compressing a cryptographic value

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
CA2692817A1 true CA2692817A1 (en) 2009-01-22

Family

ID=40259240

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
CA 2692817 Abandoned CA2692817A1 (en) 2007-07-17 2008-07-09 Method of compressing a cryptographic value

Country Status (4)

Country Link
US (2) US8073139B2 (en)
EP (1) EP2168299A4 (en)
CA (1) CA2692817A1 (en)
WO (1) WO2009009868A1 (en)

Families Citing this family (17)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN102571740A (en) * 2010-09-09 2012-07-11 西尔瑞特有限公司 Conditionally obfuscating one or more secret entities with respect to one or more billing statements related to one or more communiques addressed to the one or more secret entities
US9003181B2 (en) * 2011-03-23 2015-04-07 Certicom Corp. Incorporating data into cryptographic components of an ECQV certificate
US8675869B2 (en) 2011-03-23 2014-03-18 Blackberry Limited Incorporating data into an ECDSA signature component
FR2979043B1 (en) * 2011-08-12 2016-02-12 Gratzer And Partners DEVICE AND METHOD FOR COMPRESSION OF PUBLIC KEYS FOR FULLY HOMOMORPHIC ENCRYPTION ALGORITHM
CN103546567B (en) * 2013-10-28 2016-12-07 中国航天科工集团第二研究院七〇六所 Without certificate cross-domain authentication method in a kind of credible cloud computing environment
CN105187425B (en) * 2015-09-02 2018-01-30 南京理工大学紫金学院 Facing cloud calculus communication system safety without certificate thresholding decryption method
US11625694B2 (en) 2016-02-23 2023-04-11 Nchain Licensing Ag Blockchain-based exchange with tokenisation
EP4369273A2 (en) 2016-02-23 2024-05-15 nChain Licensing AG A method and system for securing computer software using a distributed hash table and a blockchain
GB2561729A (en) 2016-02-23 2018-10-24 Nchain Holdings Ltd Secure multiparty loss resistant storage and transfer of cryptographic keys for blockchain based systems in conjunction with a wallet management system
WO2017145019A1 (en) 2016-02-23 2017-08-31 nChain Holdings Limited Registry and automated management method for blockchain-enforced smart contracts
KR20180115727A (en) 2016-02-23 2018-10-23 엔체인 홀딩스 리미티드 Block Chain Implementation Counting System and Method for Use in Security Voting and Distribution
CN115549887A (en) 2016-02-23 2022-12-30 恩链控股有限公司 Determination of a common secret and hierarchical deterministic keys for the secure exchange of information
EA201891830A1 (en) 2016-02-23 2019-02-28 Нчейн Холдингс Лимитед SYSTEM AND METHOD OF MANAGING ACTIONS ASSOCIATED WITH ASSETS BY MEANS OF A BLOCKBOX
EP3420669B1 (en) 2016-02-23 2021-03-24 Nchain Holdings Limited Cryptographic method and system for secure extraction of data from a blockchain
CA3014748C (en) * 2016-02-23 2024-03-12 nChain Holdings Limited Personal device security using elliptic curve cryptography for secret sharing
CA3014737A1 (en) 2016-02-23 2017-08-31 nChain Holdings Limited Blockchain-implemented method for control and distribution of digital content
US9800411B1 (en) 2016-05-05 2017-10-24 ISARA Corporation Using a secret generator in an elliptic curve cryptography (ECC) digital signature scheme

Family Cites Families (23)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5497423A (en) 1993-06-18 1996-03-05 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. Method of implementing elliptic curve cryptosystems in digital signatures or verification and privacy communication
AU3073595A (en) * 1994-07-29 1996-03-04 Certicom Corp. Elliptic curve encryption systems
US6252960B1 (en) * 1998-08-04 2001-06-26 Hewlett-Packard Company Compression and decompression of elliptic curve data points
CA2257008C (en) * 1998-12-24 2007-12-11 Certicom Corp. A method for accelerating cryptographic operations on elliptic curves
US7599491B2 (en) * 1999-01-11 2009-10-06 Certicom Corp. Method for strengthening the implementation of ECDSA against power analysis
US7092523B2 (en) * 1999-01-11 2006-08-15 Certicom Corp. Method and apparatus for minimizing differential power attacks on processors
US6490352B1 (en) * 1999-03-05 2002-12-03 Richard Schroeppel Cryptographic elliptic curve apparatus and method
DE60132962T2 (en) * 2000-01-21 2009-02-26 Sony Corp. DATA PROCESSING DEVICE AND DATA PROCESSING METHOD
US7111175B2 (en) * 2000-12-28 2006-09-19 Intel Corporation Method and apparatus for verifying the integrity of a media key block
US20030037237A1 (en) * 2001-04-09 2003-02-20 Jean-Paul Abgrall Systems and methods for computer device authentication
US7006673B2 (en) * 2001-07-25 2006-02-28 Activcard Ireland Limited Method of hash string extraction
CA2427870C (en) * 2002-05-03 2014-07-08 Certicom Corp. Method and apparatus for performing elliptic curve arithmetic
CN1682488B (en) * 2002-09-16 2010-11-03 艾利森电话股份有限公司 Loading data onto an electronic device
US7043015B2 (en) * 2002-10-31 2006-05-09 Microsoft Corporation Methods for point compression for Jacobians of hyperelliptic curves
KR101027199B1 (en) * 2002-12-03 2011-04-06 파나소닉 주식회사 Key sharing system, shared key creation device, and shared key restoration device
US7555122B2 (en) * 2002-12-04 2009-06-30 Wired Communications LLC Method for elliptic curve point multiplication
IL156606A (en) * 2003-06-23 2011-07-31 Aviad Kipnis Digital certificates
US7584153B2 (en) * 2004-03-15 2009-09-01 Qsecure, Inc. Financial transactions with dynamic card verification values
US7693277B2 (en) * 2005-01-07 2010-04-06 First Data Corporation Generating digital signatures using ephemeral cryptographic key
EP1842128B1 (en) * 2005-01-18 2011-11-09 Certicom Corp. Accelerated verification of digital signatures and public keys
WO2006077651A1 (en) * 2005-01-24 2006-07-27 Fujitsu Limited Encrypting device having tamper resistance against power analysis attack
US8468361B2 (en) 2005-09-21 2013-06-18 Broadcom Corporation System and method for securely provisioning and generating one-time-passwords in a remote device
US7813503B2 (en) * 2006-09-13 2010-10-12 Pitney Bowes Inc. Method and system for generation of cryptographic keys for use in cryptographic systems

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
WO2009009868A1 (en) 2009-01-22
US20090022311A1 (en) 2009-01-22
US20120039466A1 (en) 2012-02-16
US8073139B2 (en) 2011-12-06
EP2168299A4 (en) 2011-10-05
US8548165B2 (en) 2013-10-01
EP2168299A1 (en) 2010-03-31

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US8073139B2 (en) Method of compressing a cryptographic value
EP2174445B1 (en) Method of providing text representation of a cryptographic value
US5432852A (en) Large provably fast and secure digital signature schemes based on secure hash functions
Hakak et al. Approaches for preserving content integrity of sensitive online Arabic content: A survey and research challenges
JP4555859B2 (en) Authentication system, authentication method, certification device, verification device, program and recording medium thereof
US7730319B2 (en) Provisional signature schemes
US20110060903A1 (en) Group signature system, apparatus and storage medium
EP2375628A2 (en) Signature schemes using bilinear mappings
US8139765B2 (en) Elliptical polynomial-based message authentication code
CN110363509B (en) Information protection method and device
CN112887081B (en) SM 2-based signature verification method, device and system
CN112380269B (en) Identity card information inquiry and evidence fixing and obtaining method based on block chain
WO2007106261A1 (en) Endpoint verification using call signs
JP4772965B2 (en) Method for proving entity authenticity and / or message integrity
US6928163B1 (en) Methods, systems and computer program products for generating user-dependent RSA values without storing seeds
EP2294753B1 (en) Method and apparatus for generating a signature for a message and method and apparatus for verifying such a signature
Rahouma Reviewing and applying security services with non-english letter coding to secure software applications in light of software trade-offs
CN104935591A (en) Dynamic password generating and verifying method based on asymmetric identity
JPWO2006057171A1 (en) Signature and verification method and signature and verification apparatus
WO2011033642A1 (en) Signature generation device and signature verification device
Chakraborty et al. On the security of TrCBC
Zhang et al. An improved secure cloud storage auditing protocol based on distributed string equality checking
Oleksik et al. Methods for data validation using QR codes
Andrei et al. Methods for data validation using QR codes
Gao et al. Similarity-based Secure Deduplication for IIoT Cloud Management System

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
EEER Examination request
FZDE Discontinued

Effective date: 20150402